Wednesday, May 17, 2006

So Dark the Con of Man

The much-hyped movie premieres today at the Cannes Film Festival and hits theaters this Friday. While some people are eagerly waiting for its release, some conservative sections worldwide are busy launching protests to stop the screening of the The Da Vinci Code. Roman Catholics in India began a hunger strike, while the followers of the Orthodox Church in Greece have launched angry demonstrations. Some time back the Vatican officials had called for its boycott.
Do the protests make sense? Well, some of the ideas projected by the book are indeed controversial. The book suggests that Jesus had a wife and their bloodline survives even today, portrays the Opus Dei as a wicked cult trying to hide the true origin of Christianity by hook or crook, claims that the Priory of Sion still worships Mary Magdalene and is trying to keep the truth alive, and much more! How much of this is true? Hard to tell! In fact, a whole bunch of books have been written to address this issue.
Let’s get back to the question about whether the protests make any sense at all. Does the book grossly misrepresent the Christian faith? May be. Does the book hurt Christian sentiments? Probably yes. But with over 60 million copies sold and the book translated into some 44 languages, don’t you think the damage has been done already? Will the screening of the movie make a huge difference now?
On my end, I’m excited about finding out what Ron Howard, Tom Hanks, and the team have to offer. I had read the book some two years back. From what I remember, from a literary point of view, it’s no work of art. But as a thriller, I found it sensational. It throws new information on such commonplace topics, that too in such an intriguing manner, that it’s bound to enthrall anyone. Now hopefully it’ll be a blockbuster.
Somewhere inside me, I wish the conservatives were more of a sport. If Mr. Justice Smith could put a code in his ruling for fun, why can’t these guys take it easy? On a more serious note, although the book portrays Jesus Christ as a man, it does not question his greatness. However it does point the finger at the church in many ways. So, it boils down to the question, is the church really trying to protect the faith, or is it merely trying to curb all questions raised? :-)

5 comments:

  1. Anonymous2:13 PM

    I think the Da Vinci Code is already getting more attention thn it deserves

    ReplyDelete
  2. The church is protecting exactly what it is supposed to protect - itself!

    Imagine a movie talking about the greatness of Ram but saying that he said that people of all castes should be respected* - how much will the Brahmins protest - don't you think?

    -A
    [* something that he said, when he gladly ate the berries that Shabri, the tribal, had tasted]

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous4:26 PM

    No Comments! :)

    I've read the book, and I agree that the damage has already been done... The movie would surely be a blockbuster, if its been given the same treatment as the book was...

    Looking forward to watch the movie...

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous3:43 PM

    "Truth, in matters of religion, is simply the opinion that has survived."
    So it is perceived that the purists will start screaming when you raise a question about Christ.

    But to look into the brighter side they actually should be happy cause among all these they actually are
    getting a movie that tells the story about Christ!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous10:02 PM

    Hi there...
    nice article...And i guess u know..the church is protecting itself and so-called Christian religion...because if the truth comes out, they're all roasted...

    Prashanth
    http://blogbible-general.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete